Solar panels like these on the rooftop of Itochu headquarters in Tokyo  would become more common in Japan under Prime Minister Naoto Kan's  ambitious renewable energy plan. But this summer, the emphasis is on  conservation.
At Tokyo's Meiji Gakuin University, professor Keiko  Tanaka has been teaching classes with half as much lighting as usual  and with less reliance on computers and other electricity-hogging tools.  She now often gets out her chalk and eraser to use the blackboard.
But  with tsunami-torn Japan's electricity system struggling, she wonders  whether her fellow citizens will commit to the level of energy savings  the nation needs.
"Japan is a country where 18-year-old girls take  the elevator to go up a single flight of stairs because they don't want  to sweat," she said. "It is a country where most toilet seats are  heated, and there is an electric noisemaker in the women's toilet to  mask the noise. People have really gotten used to creature comfort at  very high energy costs."
Those costs are under  scrutiny as perhaps never before, due to the loss of the nuclear plant  Fukushima Daiichi and other grid infrastructure damage in the wake of  the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The International Energy Agency  (IEA) said in a report this week that Japan "is in the midst of perhaps  one of the most severe electricity shortfalls in history."
Japan has scrambled to repair infrastructure and  increase its imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG), but the problem  could get worse, the IEA warned, due to political backlash against  nuclear energy, which before March provided one-third of the nation's  electricity.
In the long run, Prime Minister  Naoto Kan has indicated a push for renewables, setting a new goal of 10  million solar-powered homes by 2020, and abandoning ambitious nuclear  expansion plans. But Japan—which has no fossil fuel resources of its  own—faces an immediate test in the sweltering months of July and August,  when air conditioning demand typically strains the grid. Japan's  government says its citizens need to reduce their electricity demand this summer by 15 percent, and in Tokyo, the goal is 25 percent.
The  IEA says Japan faces a challenge in meeting these goals, since—heated  toilets aside—its economy already is far more energy-efficient than that  of other nations. To make even greater strides, "Japan will have to  undertake deep energy-efficiency and conservation measures," the IEA  report concludes.
Faced with potential crisis this summer, Japan has  attempted to ramp up the Cool Biz campaign it has promoted since 2005.  Re-branding it Super Cool Biz, Japan is calling for offices to keep  temperatures at 28°C (85°F), when summer high temperatures in Tokyo can  surpass 30°C (86°F) with high humidity. Office workers  are encouraged  to shed their business suits in favor of sandals, khakis, and pedal pushers.
Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry announced it planned to lead by example on energy savings—reducing  the use of printers and copiers in its offices, deactivating automatic  doors, reducing the number of elevators in services, and adopting early  work hours.
But some advocates of saving energy  already are frustrated. Taro Kono, a member of the House of  Representatives in Japan's Diet, the national parliament, said he has  been trying to encourage telecommuting, but the effort has fallen short  of his expectations because many businesses remain unwilling to  relinquish the ability to physically see what workers are accomplishing.
Japan's  energy consumption per unit of GDP is 20 percent below the world  average and 30 percent below that of the United States, according to the  World Resources Institute's widely followed EarthTrends data.  Japan's Agency for Natural Resources and Energy (ANRE) estimates that  Japan improved its energy efficiency 37 percent in the past 30 years.
The IEA, in its report entitled "Saving Electricity in a Hurry,"  said it remains unclear how much farther small and medium-sized  Japanese businesses will cut demand voluntarily. The IEA said many  energy-saving measures at those companies require shifting operations to  evenings and weekends—something that will require unions' approval and  could disrupt many parents' schedules.
Post-Tsunami, an Anti-Nuclear Wave
Adding  to Japan's electricity shortfall woes is a growing issue due to the  nation's long-standing requirement that its nuclear power plants undergo  routine maintenance every 13 months, with politicians in the plants'  regional prefectures providing final approval before restart. The  restarts typically are approved routinely, but all have been delayed  since the Fukushima Daiichi disaster. More as a result of these holdups  than earthquake damage, only 19 of Japan's 54 nuclear reactors are now  in operation.
Kyushu Electric, which provides power to southwest Japan, received a welcome bit of news this month, when a local mayor approved its proposal  to restart the reactors at its Genkai nuclear power plant in Saga  prefecture. Those reactors had been shut down for maintenance since last  winter. 
The final decision lies with the prefecture's governor, Yasushi Furukawa, who expects to make a decision by mid-July.
Energy  experts say that if Furukawa decides against a restart, other governors  could follow suit—setting in motion a chain of events that could idle  all of Japan's nuclear reactors within a year.
Trade and Industry Minister Banri Kaieda this week sought to reassure citizens of the reactors' safety, pledging that the government would order stress-testing at all the plants.
Renewable Energy's Rising Sun
It  remains to be seen whether the stress testing in the coming weeks will  succeed in reassuring Japan's citizens on nuclear plants' ability to  withstand earthquakes and tsunamis, but it is clear that opponents have  been able to seize on the Fukushima disaster to urge rapid expansion of  alternative sources.
They have argued  that Japan's rich geothermal resources—with nearly 200 volcanoes and  some 28,000 hot springs—could provide more than 80,000 megawatts of  generating capacity, enough to meet half of the country's electricity  needs. In addition, a 2009 study  published in the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  estimated that the country's land-based wind resources could provide  another half of its electricity.
Japan has  aggressively sought to upgrade its solar potential—a cause taken up by  Kan before he survived a no-confidence vote earlier this month. 
The  country has set a goal of increasing solar photovoltaics, mostly in  rooftop panels, from 3,500 megawatts in 2010 to 53,000 megawatts by  2030. Beyond Kan's target of powering 10 million homes by 2020, there  would be enough solar photovoltaics to power 18 million Japanese homes  by 2030.
Masayoshi Son, the founder of Softbank Mobile and the country's wealthiest man, has drawn substantial attention  for his plan to start a research foundation for renewable energy,  bolstered by millions of his own start-up money. So far, 35 of Japan's  47 prefectures have signed on as founding members.
"The means to do this are certainly in abundance," said Andrew DeWit,  a professor of public finance at Tokyo's Rikkyo University who studies  the country's energy situation. "This sounds like idealistic talk, but I  really think Japan, given that it's got all this pent-up demand for  renewables, could see in over a year or two a truly astounding  emplacement of renewable capacity."
DeWit  acknowledged, however, that Japan's nuclear energy proponents will not  abandon that energy source easily. "There's all kinds of rhetoric—that  wind farms are too noisy, they kill birds and so on," he said. "The  energy economy of this country is going to be decided over the next few  months . . . The key things seem to me to be the increasing heat of  summer and how disastrous this nuclear problem is."
With the future of Japan's energy supply in  question, the focus for most citizens now is on cutting demand. Kazuto  Tsuchiya, a student at the University of Southern California who is  spending the summer with family in Suzaka in central Japan, said his  relatives put off an earlier decision to buy an air conditioner.
"We  are going to bear the heat of summer with round paper fans and Japanese  folding fans," he said. Tschiya sees his fellow citizens neither  resisting conservation nor enthusiastically embracing it.
"It's more like people think that it's 'sho ga nai' in Japanese, meaning, 'We have no choice, we have to accept,' '' he said.
by 'environment clean generations" 

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